Imagick::getImageChannelRange

(PECL imagick 2.2.1)

Imagick::getImageChannelRangeGets channel range

설명

array Imagick::getImageChannelRange ( int $channel )

Gets the range for one or more image channels. 이 메쏘드는 Imagick을 ImageMagick 6.4.0 이상으로 컴파일 했을 때만 사용할 수 있습니다.

인수

channel

채널 모드에 유효한 채널 상수를 제공합니다. 둘 이상의 채널을 적용하려면, 비트 연산자를 이용해서 채널 상수를 조합하십시오. 기본값은 Imagick::CHANNEL_DEFAULT. 채널 상수 목록을 참고하십시오.

반환값

Returns an array containing minima and maxima values of the channel(s).

오류/예외

오류시에 ImagickException이 발생합니다.

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User Contributed Notes 1 note

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holdoffhunger at gmail dot com
12 years ago
The getImageChannelRange returns an array with two values mapped to the keys 'minima' and 'maxima', which are simply the minimum and maximum values of that particular channel within the image that this function is performed upon.  For photographs and high-quality imagery, that means that you're almost always guaranteed to have the minima be at 0 and the maxima be at the maximum bit-value allowed.  For most images, that's 65,535, which is the value of 2^16 (if you start counting at 0), meaning 16-bits per Channel imagery.  This goes for all of the channels.

If an image is simple, though, you may be able to get a better variety of ranges.  An image that was simply a red square, the maxima and minima values for the Red Channel were both 65,535 (max), while the channels for the maxima and minima values for all other channels was 0 (min).  If you want to know the maximum values you might get back for any of the channels, feed this function the default channel.

For your normal channels, you'll have something that looks like "imagick::CHANNEL_RED", but you could have unusual channels like "imagick::CHANNEL_OPACITY".  For colors, you have the "_VALUE" options of: red, gray, cyan, green, magenta, blue, yellow, all, and default.  For unusual channels, you have the "_VALUE" options of: undefined, alpha, opacity, matte, black, and index.  With this function, the unusual channels always produce a minima of 1.0E+37 (10^37) and a maxima of -1.0E-37 (-10^-37), which makes no sense, so stick to the color values I pointed to above.

This function doesn't work for you?  No problem.  The function getImageChannelExtrema does the same *EXACT* thing.  The only difference is that the error you get on the unusual channels: their minima and maxima, instead of defaulting to crazy values, simply defaults to 0.

In general, this function seems to have the utility of telling you how simple an image might be -- if the difference between a channel maxima and minima is very small, that means there wasn't much expression of color for that given channel.  This will probably be able to tell you whether an image was drawn in some simple paint program or if it's an actual photograph, but beyond that, you'll have to do intensive programming to make it figure something out more complicated.

And now, an example of the results for some red-only image:

ImageMagick - Channel Range
Channel - 'Undefined' :     Minima: 1.0E+37     Maxima: -1.0E-37
Channel - 'Red' :     Minima: 65535     Maxima: 65535
Channel - 'Gray' :     Minima: 65535     Maxima: 65535
Channel - 'Cyan' :     Minima: 65535     Maxima: 65535
Channel - 'Green' :     Minima: 0     Maxima: 0
Channel - 'Magenta' :     Minima: 0     Maxima: 0
Channel - 'Blue' :     Minima: 0     Maxima: 0
Channel - 'Yellow' :     Minima: 0     Maxima: 0
Channel - 'Alpha' :     Minima: 1.0E+37     Maxima: -1.0E-37
Channel - 'Opacity' :     Minima: 1.0E+37     Maxima: -1.0E-37
Channel - 'Matte' :     Minima: 1.0E+37     Maxima: -1.0E-37
Channel - 'Black' :     Minima: 1.0E+37     Maxima: -1.0E-37
Channel - 'Index' :     Minima: 1.0E+37     Maxima: -1.0E-37
Channel - 'All' :     Minima: 0     Maxima: 65535
Channel - 'Default' :     Minima: 0     Maxima: 65535
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